![]() ![]() Using a system like Bear/Ulysses means the app has some complicated system for “external” folders. This means some folder on my computer containing our notes and other stuff. For my kind of work, I use GitHub repos for projects. This same design means I can access Nota notes on computers without the app through the iCloud web interface, or use a totally different app like iA Writer on iOS. This means if you already pay for iCloud or Dropbox or whatever, then you just place your Nota root under that system and get file syncing for free. Nota behaves in the same way via the app, but ultimately the notes are stored under a “root” folder on your computer (that you select when you setup). The great thing about Bear is that I can organize my notes and I don’t think about where they are saved. Ultimately, the way files are stored really sold me on Nota. Eventually, they plan on building an iOS app as well. So, I use iA Writer on iOS, but I mainly write on my Mac so this isn’t an issue. Only thing on your list that is missing is an iOS app… but Nota’s plain text file design means you aren’t locked in (like you would be with Bear or Craft). This is not like iA Writer which has a full preview split view. It does inline preview, so things like images or math are automatically rendered alongside the rest of the markdown. I think it’s 100% worth the price having paid for all of the above in the past. I’ve finally found an app that has it all: Nota. First class app for the Apple ecosystem.It seems that I prioritize the same things you do: ![]() I’ve looked at Obsidian too, but it was eliminated from my list from the get go for design + being overkill for me. I’ve tried many note taking/markdown apps (Bear, Craft, Ulysses, iA Writer, Notable, VS Code + plugins, Sublime Text + plugins, Simplenote, Taio, FS Notes). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |